As cries of marginalization grows, the government of one of Cameroon’s
Anglophone regions ordered its border with Nigeria closed in response to calls
by activists for protests to demand more rights for the country’s
English-speaking minority.

The move on Thursday represents an escalation in a crackdown on months of
protest spurred by complaints about political and economic discrimination in
the Anglophone regions of the predominantly Francophone country.

Security forces killed six protesters and arrested hundreds of others
following calls for reforms by lawyers and teachers last year, and the internet
was shut down in Anglophone regions from January to April.

The Anglophone regions have strong ties to eastern Nigeria, and authorities
may fear that allowing the border to remain open during protests offers the
demonstrators a rear base and makes it harder to maintain order.

Anglophone activists have called for a renewed protest on Sunday after
thousands took to the streets last week, with some hoisting separatist flags.

In a statement, Southwest region’s governor, Bernard Okalia Bilai, said the
border would be closed from 9 p.m. (2000 GMT) until 7 a.m, “following
persistent threats of destabilisation through manipulation by individuals
acting from outside the national territory.”

The order also banned inter-city transportation, gatherings of more than
four people in public locations and all port activity during that same period.